Fired Exec Files Sexual Harassment Suit Against Chamber BY SUSAN USHER A former executive vice president of the South Brunswick Islands Chamber of Commerce is accusing the chamber and two of its board members of sexual harassment and sexual dis crimination in a civil complaint Filed Tuesday in Brunswick County Superior Court. The complaint was filed by Hollis B. (Holly) Richards against the South Brunswick Islands Cham ber of Commerce, Inc.; Annette Odom, immediate past president; and Terry Barbee, president. In her complaint Richards said that she was fired "on account of her sex." Richards, who began work for the chamber July 15, 1991, was fired April 17, 1992. A newly hired chamber executive, William Dcarman of Albany, Ga., is to be gin work Sept 15. "1 have no complaint against the membership of the chamber or the citizens of Brunswick County...," Richards said in a written statement released Tuesday. "I feel that the chambcr membership and the pub lic have a right to know about the leadership of the chambcr." Richards said she was "forced" to file the suit after an offer of set tlement was made to her from the chamber leadership by a third party ? a chamber member she said she had agreed not to identify ? to which she made a counter offer with a Sept. 4 deadline for reply. "However, at this time the counter offer has not been ft responded to, therefore we had no choice other than to pursue the suit" During Richards' tenure with the chamber, the com plaint contends, she was "subjected to sexual innuendo, suggestions, advances and harassment" by Odom and Bar bee. She asserts that after she repeatedly rejected partici pation in sexually-oriented activities the two "began a campaign against her to have her employment termi nated." The complaint alleges the two knowingly made "false and slanderous" accusations of misconduct "for the purpose of creating difficulty for the plaintiff in her job and either forcing her resignation or creating such an environment that her job would be terminated." Both Barbee and Odom were contacted by the Beacon for comment, but neither had seen a copy of the complaint until late Tuesday afternoon. They indi catcd they would respond after reviewing the charges, but neither had done so as of 1 1 p.m. Tuesday. After reviewing some but not all of the 20-page complaint Odom told a reporter, "1 am in a state of absolute shock." Among other things, the com plaint asserts that Richards rejected "nude hot tubbing" with chamber leaders, refused to date a married man recommended to her by one of the defendants and rejected defen odom dams' alleged sexuai advances. The complaint alleges that prior to rebuffing overt sexual overtures, Richards had received no complaints about her work from the chamber, with a good 90-day review in early October. (See SUIT. Page 2-A) IS. /99 jAG ?.< SONS 300 0. BOX 16' SPRINQPORT ~VVlUv Thirtieth Year, Number 45 *199? VH( MUNSWtCK MACON Shallotte, North Carolina, Thursday, September 1 0> 1992 5QC Per Copy- Pages, 3 Sections, 4 Inserts Fire Chief Says Inferior Pagers Cripple County 911 System BY ERIC CARLSON Citing what he called life-thrcat cning deficiencies in the county's 91 1 communications system, a local fire chief Tuesday criticized emer gency management officials for pur chasing low-quality equipment from a Wilmington dealer for more than it would have cost to buy within the county. Civietown Volunteer Fire Chief A1 Nord said at a Brunswick County Commissioners meeting that the ra dio pagers used to alert firefighters of an emergency do not pick up sig nals in many parts of the county. He said the pagers, which were selected by Emergency Management Coordinator Cecil Logan, are prone to breakdowns and are not built to adequate safety specifications. Nord further charged that Logan acted improperly in spending $86,832 for 324 pagers from an out of -county source without advertising for written bicis. He produced a pro posal from a Sunset Beach commu nications dealer offering to sell the same pagers to the county at a cost of $10 less per unit While the incoming side of the Emergency Services Center is excel lent, Nord said the operation is "to tally crippled" by a radio transmis sion system that does not cover Brunswick County. "The consoles and the telephone equipment are state -of-the art, but when a call comes in, those dis patchers don't leave their desks to respond to emergencies. We do," said Nord. Logan told the commissioners that he had tested several types of pagers for six weeks and decided on the Japanese-made Shinwa model because of its lower cost He said the pagers were bought from Wilmington Communications be cause the company offered better service than the local dealer, Kanoy Communications. He said the pagers met all necessary safety specifica tions. "They're lh